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Getbig Bodybuilding Boards => Positive Bodybuilding Discussion & Talk => Topic started by: Wiggs on April 19, 2006, 10:14:10 AM

Title: Alright which one of you monsters is this?
Post by: Wiggs on April 19, 2006, 10:14:10 AM
101-pound man eats 6,500 calories a day
Stomach condition keeps 22-year-old from putting on weight



Updated: 1:04 p.m. ET April 19, 2006
IDAHO FALLS, Idaho - A 5-foot-9, 22-year-old man who eats 6,500 calories a day — two and a half times the average intake for an adult male — has earned a special reward for breaking the 100-pound mark:

Dinner out from his mom.

"I'm a medical mystery," said Matt Chaffee, who weighed in at 101 pounds on Saturday. "I've accepted it."

Chaffee, who has a 26-inch waist, had several health problems as a newborn. One of them, pyloric stenosis, prevents food from emptying out of the stomach. The condition and ulcers he developed in his esophagus reduced his ability to gain weight.

Chaffee weighed 8 pounds when he was 4 months old, and 17 pounds when he reached kindergarten, his mother said. He was up to 85 pounds at age 14, but couldn't participate in some activities, including swimming.

"He sinks like a rock," his mother, Kelley Chaffee, told the Post Register.

Since turning 18 his goal has been to go over 100 pounds. He achieved that on a diet that included 5,000 calories a day in protein shakes.

"He was so happy," Kelley Chaffee said.

Sandi Birch, a registered dietitian at Eastern Idaho Regional Medical
Center, said most of the people she deals with are not trying to put on weight.

"Its far more common to have the opposite problem," she said.

Matt Chaffee is an Eastern Idaho Technical College student and WinCo Foods cashier who works out five days a week and can bench press 130 pounds. He uses his bike for daily transportation.
Title: Re: Alright which one of you monsters is this?
Post by: blondmusclhunk on April 19, 2006, 01:46:10 PM
I just saw this on the net.  Wild I guess there are times when people say they  cant gain weight.  Most of the time its cause they dont eat enough.  If this guy can gain some weight with his condition, this should be a lesson to all the skinny guys that dont work out because they dont think they can gain weight.  EAT  A LOT
Title: Re: Alright which one of you monsters is this?
Post by: ToxicAvenger on April 19, 2006, 03:57:58 PM
someone that would do really well on 150mgs of oxandrolone /day

its not hepato toxic...
Title: Re: Alright which one of you monsters is this?
Post by: Captain Equipoise on April 21, 2006, 10:52:00 PM
LOL, I was just about to suggest 40mg's of dbol a day
Title: Re: Alright which one of you monsters is this?
Post by: gammahydroxy on April 22, 2006, 10:18:41 AM
LOL, I was just about to suggest 40mg's of dbol a day


I was going to suggest 150mg of anadrol day.. ;D
Title: Re: Alright which one of you monsters is this?
Post by: War-Horse on April 23, 2006, 10:14:08 PM
I was going to suggest 150mg of anadrol day.. ;D

Id like to suggest he stop riding his bike to work.LOL ;D
Title: Re: Alright which one of you monsters is this?
Post by: Oliver Klaushof on April 23, 2006, 10:30:54 PM
I would suggest a test cycle and 6 -8 servings of
MASS-TECH
Title: Re: Alright which one of you monsters is this?
Post by: Dnizneer on April 26, 2006, 02:05:56 PM
101-pound man eats 6,500 calories a day
Stomach condition keeps 22-year-old from putting on weight



Updated: 1:04 p.m. ET April 19, 2006
IDAHO FALLS, Idaho - A 5-foot-9, 22-year-old man who eats 6,500 calories a day — two and a half times the average intake for an adult male — has earned a special reward for breaking the 100-pound mark:

Dinner out from his mom.

"I'm a medical mystery," said Matt Chaffee, who weighed in at 101 pounds on Saturday. "I've accepted it."

Chaffee, who has a 26-inch waist, had several health problems as a newborn. One of them, pyloric stenosis, prevents food from emptying out of the stomach. The condition and ulcers he developed in his esophagus reduced his ability to gain weight.

Chaffee weighed 8 pounds when he was 4 months old, and 17 pounds when he reached kindergarten, his mother said. He was up to 85 pounds at age 14, but couldn't participate in some activities, including swimming.

"He sinks like a rock," his mother, Kelley Chaffee, told the Post Register.

Since turning 18 his goal has been to go over 100 pounds. He achieved that on a diet that included 5,000 calories a day in protein shakes.

"He was so happy," Kelley Chaffee said.

Sandi Birch, a registered dietitian at Eastern Idaho Regional Medical
Center, said most of the people she deals with are not trying to put on weight.

"Its far more common to have the opposite problem," she said.

Matt Chaffee is an Eastern Idaho Technical College student and WinCo Foods cashier who works out five days a week and can bench press 130 pounds. He uses his bike for daily transportation.


Annohrexic models must hate him.